On November 11th Graham Hancock fans will be able to tune into the first of an eight-episode series that “travels the globe hunting for evidence of mysterious, lost civilizations dating back to the last Ice Age.” Thus says Greg Taylor, noting there’s no official trailer as yet, but he is able to include a brief promo. Mark Price has some “hard but wet” evidence that at the end of that named era an 11,000-year-old Trap Proves People Lived in Alaska 1,000 Years Earlier Than Believed. And check out the reference at Scientists Discover Ancient Underwater Fish Weir in Southeast Alaska for more on what may be the oldest stone fish trap ever found and also information about the praiseworthy activities behind the discovery. Graham Hancock might not have seen them, but he’d certainly be interested in The Mysterious Viking Runes Found in a Landlocked US State. BBC Travel’s Heide Brandes relates the history and perhaps prehistory of Oklahoma’s Heavener Runestone Park and the woman who made it famous. And Billy Cox allows So It Ain’t Skinwalker Ranch, but North Carolina’s Mystery Hill is a fun “authentic vortex,” with its own charming stories. (WM)
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